tojimacostaat the white house. what is the latest in terms of diplomatic efforts on the u.s. front? >> president obama met with his national security advisers earlier this evening, they're not really looking at military options, at least according to what the white house is saying. they're focused on what can be done economically and diplomatically, you heard this talk over the weekend that u.s. and allies won't go to the g-8 summit this summer in russia. the u.s. is cancelling all military engagements that it has with the russians, that's a new step that took place this evening. you mentioned that secretary of state john kerry is heading over to kiev to talk about financial assistance that he is brings promises of from the united states and hopefully according to this white house from european allies, but the president believes that the world is on his side, not vladimir putin's side, the question is whether vladimir putin is listening. >> and in terms of options that the united states has. i mean, there are not a huge number of options. >> there aren't a whole lot of options, the

a background from a licensed dealer. >> i am sarah brady and i am here on behalfofjimbradywho was wound on the assassination attempt of ronald regan. >> i am dan gross and i am here for my brother matthew who was shot in the head on top of the empire state building and for the 90 americans who are killed every day by a bullet and for everyone of else who wants to live in a safer nation. today we are here to mark the o 20-year anniversary of what could be called the greatest step forward toward a goal of a safer nation. the brady handgun violence act took affect 20 years ago. to introduce this special report that we have issued to celebrate the success of the legislation and to define the critical work that is ahead. 20 years of background checks and keeping america safer. i would like to thank the special guest. the victims and families that have joined us here today. i speak for all of the us here and so many across american when i say how much you inspire us to continue our work. our very important partners from the law enforcement community. and we really appreciate your strong repr

anniversary of the brady handgun violence prevention act. forcontrol advocates pass expandedprevention.jimbradywas shot in the head during an assassination attempt on reagan and 1981. sarah brady is the founder of the brady foundation. she is the police chief of baltimore and gun violence victims were at the spent today. >> good morning. welcome. i am the president of the brady campaign to prevent gun violence. we are very clear to be here to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the brady law and to release our new report. before we get to those things, we want to begin by showing why we're all here. why our mission is so vitally important and why we cannot ever give up. >> good morning. my name is kenny barnes. i live in washington dc. i'm a victim of senseless gun violence. this is a picture of my son. he was killed september 24, 2001. right here in washington, d.c. on the corner of 11th and u stre et northwest. >> good morning. my name is eddie. , my mother was shot to death in front of me. the gun was also turned on me. it malfunctioned. i am here today along with other victims and su

this rain and mountain snow so much. >> accu weathermeteorologistjimdickeyis tracking the pacific storm and another one hitting the northeast. good morning, jim. >> good morning, john and marci. we are tracking snow across the east into new england. through the early morning hours. it is weak but it will travel along the i-95 corridor. boston, south and west, new york city into d.c. just picking up a coating to an inch or show but leaving roadways slick. meanwhile, dealing with brutal cold along the upper midwest. northern plains minus 13, early morning low minneapolis. minus 3 in chicago. many spots above 0 during the day. soaking rain in california. we do need this but too much of a good thing will lead it flooding into the weekend. john and marci, back to you. >> jim dickey, thank you. >>> a spectacular scene from the surface of the sun. a giant solar flare erupted there yesterday. winds over 4 million miles per hour. flares often disrupt communications here on earth. this one was not directed at us. it could still cause auroras near the poles tonight. >> as the health care sign-up d

died of lou gehrig's disease at age 29. >> asabc'sjimavilareports, it is shown that traumatic brain injuries may be more widespread than originally thought. >> american kids love to play soccer. long seen as the safe alternative to u.s. football. for the first time, a soccer player has been diagnosed with cte. the very same repetitive head trauma disease found in some pro football players. >> our son, patrick, was doing headers at age three. >> patrick grange died nearly two years ago, his brain donated to scientist at boston university, studying cte, doctors announcing the frontal lobe of his brain was badly damaged. riddled with the same mind-numbing disease that leads to dementia and depression. >> getting hit in the head hundreds of thousands of times is not a normal part of life. it does not happen outside of sports and abuse. >> it is this move, the header, so dangerous for youngsters. players typically head the ball up to 12 times in a single game. watch again. that black and white sphere traveling up to 50 miles an hour. while football players are typically protected by a he

. >> that's the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff in an interview withnbc'sjimmiklashevskitoday while en route to afghanistan. that was them on the plane. general dempsey saying there he does not personally want u.s. troops to totally withdraw from afghanistan, but if there isn't a signed agreement between our government and the afghan government about u.s. troops staying on, then all u.s. forces will leave. this year. the chairman saying today that after 13 years of that war, u.s. troops accomplished their mission in afghanistan and it would not be a defeat to leave. something really specific seems to have led to today's big news about the war and the end of the war. this is defense secretary chuck hagel. this is him last october in brussels at nato headquarters. he was there meeting with all the other people who have his same job and all the other nato countries. it was the meeting of the nato defense ministers. at that meeting late last year, defense secretary chuck hagel told all the other defense secretaries in nato that by the next time they all got together, the u.s. and

news forever taking swipes at us. >> you know,unclejimwhois a little stubborn and been watching fox news, somebody who said well, i don't know, i was watching fox news and they said it's horrible. >> one television station. [ laughter ] entirely devoted to attacking my administration. >> and even just last night president obama making a sneaky reference about fox when he referenced republicans watching, quote, the wrong newscast. yeah, i know. the critics are not saying nice things about us but that's their problem not ours. makes them sort of look petty, doesn't it? sometimes like they are hiding stuff. their cracks are helping us. they are giving us free advertising. advertising we can't even pay for. they have been doing this for years and we have been number one since january 2002. so, thank you to the critics and have at it. keep it it up. that's my off-the-record comment tonight. if you have an important story or issue you think i should take off-the-record go to gretawire.com and tell us about it straight ahead, are you sitting down? you might want to. what is worse than conv

is the star of the show, yourhost,jimlang.>> thank you. bill: that is an american icon rightthere.jimlang,the long-time host of "the dating game" has left us, dying yesterday at his home in mill valley, california of a heart attack. best known for hosting "the dating game" for more than a decade. look at those guys. here we go, ladies. since 1965 he helped people pick a potential suitor in secret. celebrities like mack call jackson, steve martin, farrah fawcett all appeared on the show. he later returned to radio. his first love as morning disk jockey before retiring 80 years ago. jim lang lange was 81 years young. martha: you had that then. and hot tubs and fantasy suites. that was a much simpler time. that was first reality shows. send them on a date. tell them how the it was. bachelor number two, bill hemmer. bill: step right up. martha: obamacare has been front and center and will continue to be as we get closer to midterm elections as balance of power is back up for grabs in very real way. both sides are using the affordable care act in ad campaigns as you might imagine to atta

bergus. gary august steen is the new executive director. nice to have you back. marine corpsveteranjimnowserves as dav national service director and his fellow marine corps veteran barry janowski leads as executive director of headquarters in coal spring, kentucky. very good to have you back, too. with us today is miss susan miller who was elected today office of national commander of the dav aux illry. she prefld served as a registered nurse with the veterans administration and her son, trent, is a member of the united states army, recently serving in his second deployment to afghanistan. gentlemen and miss miller, thank you for your leadership and for your service. i look forward to working with each of you in your new roles and continuing to work with those of you that are continuing in the roles that you have had for a number of years. i'd also like to recognize the dav members from my home state of florida who may be with us today. if you could just raise your hand so we can say hello. isn't this just like home? this is just like home. welcome to those from the sunshine state. w

loyalty is to the work of art, and she is encouraged to work with the officernamedjimwhois the curator of the museum and goes on to be the director after the war and they do this dance over a period of about six months of what i really referred to as kind of a dance of courtship not in the romantic sense, that trying to see if he can be trusted with this information. and there are two people of destiny each holding path of the same key. rose is determined to find every single thing taken from her country and she persists with this until 1981 when she dies and never gives up on it. it becomes a pain in the side to the people in france but want the subject to go away but she is a woman in a man's world. she had no transportation. and on the other hand, jim wants to fulfill his destiny and do something great and realizes he can play a role in the work of art recovered in france but he has transportation hub as part of the second lieutenant in the army that he doesn't know where to go. so, this is the dynamic between the two of them back and forth. her testing to see can you be trusted, wi

are thrilled with you stepping up to dothat.jimdobbinsis someone that has taught us now i won't say how long but going on at least 15 years about how we need to think about peace and security and the u.s. involvement. so the fact that you have stepped up to the school there couldn't be a better person and perspective and i want to acknowledge bill taylor who i saw walking in. bill is also -- i met bill first in afghanistan in 2002 and he remains one of the best examples of a diplomat and boss that i've ever had. when i traveled to afghanistan for the first time 21 years ago, i would come to witness what i believe is one of the greatest foreign-policy mistakes that our country has ever made and that was the abandonment of afghanistan and the gradual or sometimes not gradual distraction to afghanistan, its communities, its infrastructure, its relationships with its neighbors that we are still climbing out of today. i have over my career watched conflict unfold slowly into the development unfold slowly. and conflict is much more efficient. and it costs actually a lot less to perpetrate. de

medicate the profound psychological pain he was feeling with jackdaniel's,jimbeamor whatever was handy. that doesn't work but it took quite a long time for him to figure that out. and somehow i stuck with him through this. people ask me all the time how and i have to be honest, i am still not sure. but with a lot of patience and commitment and love we stayed together, we got married. he did heal and we have been able to forge a new life together. i tell that story in this book. and a lot of the early reviews focus on the fact that i am very honest about worst parts of that recovery. some of the terms are making me a little freaked out the people and not going to want to buy it because they're focused on my honesty about those really bad stages but for me this is a story of hope, healing, recovery and love. this is a love story and this is a story about how my husband came back from profound injury, profound institutional neglect and really deep physiological cognitive and psychological woundss could be the man that he is today. and loving husband and father who just started using his g

a relatively long history with us too. it goes back to george h.w. bushandjimbakertelling at the end of the cold war mchail gorbachev that nato would go not one inch further to the east and then a series of presidents coming in who not only took nato further to the east, pushed by lockheed martin and others who wanted to sell weapons to eastern and central european countries, but hinted at georgia and ukraine. anyone who knows russian history, anyone who knows the history of empire, anyone who knows about the raw politics of raw power could have guessed that president putin would move into ukraine once we had formed a group there led by the n.e.d. and its affiliates that effectively pulled off a coup. put ourselves in putin's shoes. what is putin to think when all of a sudden a country that's been talking about bringing ukraine and even georgia into nato and into the e.u. suddenly affects the removal of his leader in kiev. if i were putin, i'd have done exactly what putin did. anyone that says they couldn't predict this was either a fool or lying. >> well, that gets at this deep ques

ambassador marc grossman whoisjimdobbinspredecessor aspects representative. and it will be moderated by andrew wilder, who heads the center for south and central asia here at the u.s. institute of peace. the second panel will be on the future of media in afghanistan. again four distinguished panelists and chaired by david ensor as moderator from head of voice of america. we hope that you can conclude from today's program that afghanistan still matters to the united states. that america's national security interests are best served by the emergence of a stable and prosperous afghanistan. that this objective can still be achieved and that, what has been accomplished in afghanistan over the last decade offers some ground for optimism that we can achieve this objective. for afghanistan has made great progress over the last 12 years in health, education, women's rights, and economic development. and you will hear about that today in these remarks and panelists. and you will also hear about the political progress that the afghan people have made. a presidential election is scheduled for th

to an broker and do it by paper and still be eligible. we are offering insurance in certaincases.jimisfrom illinois and next on the republican line. caller: good morning. a fascinating program. .wo questions for your guest you mentioned about the small business exchange and whatnot. my understanding is the small business mandate has been delayed for two years. i was wondering if you could talk about the circumstances surrounding that delay. also, the cms study methodology. why would some businesses see their premiums go up, and other businesses see their premiums go basicallythey are all buying into what is essentially the same market. guest: it small businesses have fewer than 50 full-time employees, they do not have to buy insurance. probably the most significant part of the delay is between 50 and 99. they do not have to comply until 2019. the 50-99 was the biggest delay. , they looked at the time preowned affordable care act and then post and it is the changes involve how they rate for risk. saw a copy of the report. paving. these was going to say is businesses, if they want to switch

the united states and other countries. cnn's chief national securitycorrespondentjimsciuttohas been looking into this for us. he's got the latest. >> reporter: wolf, this is really the starkest warning we've heard from u.s. officials on syria. it's part of a broader narrative about the evolving terror threat to the u.s. the bottom line, that threat is becoming more diffuse. you have offshoots of al qaeda, home grown terrorists in the u.s. and now with sear yarks veterans of that war, some of them americans, to return home to carry out attacks. >> thank you for the opportunity to be here. >> reporter: today america's top homeland security official said that syria may be the most serious terror threat to the u.s. homeland. >> i would say that for us in national security and homeland security in this government, this particular issue is t the top of list or near the top of the lis for us. we talk about it all the time. we're carefully monitoring the situation. >> reporter: syria's brutal civil war has provided al qaeda-tied terrorist groups the perfect combination of violence and lawle

to do with the 1990's when she was allied to prime minister whowasjimprisonedin the u.s. for about six years and was released a couple of years ago. the allegations are not something new. they've been around for a long time. allegation of corruption are pervasive throughout ukraine's political class. this is not something that she fears. >> this is nothing new. >> no, it's not new. the boxer made money from sports. >> sure, he was a boxer. >> all of the other political forces in one way or another have drown in corruption, all political parties in ukraine don't get money from membershipp dues. they get it from money in offshore zones. that lack of transparency within the political system has been there for a long time. there's a need to separate and break bonds between business and politics and there's certainly a need to fight corruption. no ukrainian leader, none of the four presidents of ukraine have ever had the political will to fight corruption and hencey ukraine is described by transparency international the n.g.o. watchdog on corruption as the most corrupt country in europe

. nationallage. >> tant mark burr just.st executive directors, gary augustine. servic edirectorjimmarszalek.legislative director, joseph violante. voluntary services director ron mentor. auxiliary national commander, susan miller of colorado. auxiliary national adjutant, judy heslan. senior vice commander ron pope of north carolina. vice commanders, george of, foster of california, and denni culder ofda new york. national judge advocate mike dobmayer of north dark, i am mode i can't think past national commander larry palzine of california. chief of staff raymond hutchinson of ohio and my love of my life wick he vick and my son james and his wife rhonda. one man -- [applause] one man who for the first time in decade is not the at table with us today is art wilson. he retired in 2013 after a 47-year career serving as dav's superbly effective chief executive officer and national adjutant. art's departure after such a long ands distinguished term wil clearly leave a void the dav has selected an able, experienced, executive in mark burgess as our new ceo and national adjutant. while the dav na

some. good for her. >> favorite moment. >> did she have aslimjiminthat? looks like she had stuff already. >> the other favorite moment was at the very end of the red carpet when brad and angelina arrived. the entire place stopped. they arrived without publicists, which is unheard of in this town. they walked practically flowed over the red carpet, waving to everyone. they looked like hollywood royalty. look at the two of them. she was wearing a gather justice metallic dress. they were stunning. >> michael, you made us feel like we were right there with you the whole time. we thank you for that. we want to let everybody -- >> if you follow me on foxlightmichael, you can see some of the behind the scenes pictures from the red carpet last night as well. it's like you were there! >> thank you very much. get a nap. come back to town. >>> it is 22 minutes before the top of the hour. let's go over to heather nauert who has got some headlines. >> hi there. good morning to you. south africa's most anticipated murder trial is now underway. oscar pistorius has pleaded not guilty in the murd

. formersenatorjimdeminthere with the proof of that. >>> then she didn't want to follow her parents' rules, so she moved out. now one teen-ager is suing them for money to live. does she really have a case? ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] introducing new fast acting advil. with an ultra-thin coating and fast absorbing advil ion core™ technology, it stops pain before it gets worse. nothing works faster. new fast acting advil. look for it in the white box. i'm spending too much time hiring and not enough time in my kitchen. [ female announcer ] need to hire fast? go to ziprecruiter.com and post your job to over 30 of the web's leading job boards with a single click; then simply select the best candidates from one easy to review list. you put up one post and the next day you have all these candidates. makes my job a lot easier. [ female announcer ] over 100,000 businesses have already used zip recruiter and now you can use zip recruiter for free at a special site for tv viewers; go to ziprecruiter.com/offer4. and u'll see just how much it has to offer, especially if you're thinking of movi

because they're the real deal. >> what has happened to syracuse? >> this has notbeenjimboeheim'sbest offensive or defensive team. but for the first 25 games, they operated at an incredibly high level of efficiency. they made plays at a level far above the way they normally played. their numbers aren't that different from last year. last year at the end of the season, georgetown blew them out. they lost games toward the end of the season, they couldn't score. georgetown held them to 35 points in washington, d.c. people were thinking it's over for syracuse. look at the final four. will that happen this year? i don't know. they have jeremy grant out, he's got a back issue, has not played much lately. trevor coony, their terrific shooter, has not been able to find shots. they're not a great offensive team. they're still dangerous but they have to get their mojo back a bit. >> you talked about one of my alma maters, florida gators. they're really good. >> billy donovan is a hall of fame coach. he's not a good coach, he's a great coach. they lost a lot from last year, they've gone to the e

official just got to experienceit.jimdyersays he was in the middle of a busy day when he started getting condolence messages about his own death. turns out the office of the seattle mayor, ed murray, issued a news release about dyer's passing. dyer took to his facebook page writing, "i'm dead? tired today, but otherwise i feel great. thank you for your concern, but i don't have any time for death." the mayor's office mistook diers name with another official who actuallied that died. >> i think that's worse than people thinking jimmie johnson was at the daytona 500 because of the replay and rain delay. >> every week, there's one person or celebrity that fake dies on the internet. that was his turn. >>> we're talking about the fallout and controversy over harry reid's comments, of course. we heard all of those comments coming out of harry reid on the senate floor, talking about those victims who were appearing in those videos, those republican videos. >> about obamacare. >> and whether or not they were real victims or just liars. well, look back at some of harry reid's other commen

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